Saturday
Jan242004

Lamron (Part 3)
Continuing as Lamron describes some of his "life themes." Thus far he has talked about, slow reflexes, and feeling lost.Misunderstood
Have you ever been in a foreign country surrounded by people speaking a language you did not understand? Now think of the obstacles you must clear to eat, find shelter, and work. How do you socialize or learn about current events? It would be difficult to keep u with the day of the week. You are the different one. The crowd usually ignores you, but it may laugh at you. If the crowd fears you then you are in danger of being removed and jailed. You do not have to commit a crime to be jailed - believe me. You need only be different and unable to communicate.
Unaware of Cause and Effect
I do not know if people realize the level of comfort they enjoy simply because they understand cause and effect. I am speaking on an interpersonal level. I can work a DVD player, make coffee in the morning, and change the oil in a car. Mechanically and as far as things are concerned, I understand cause and effect. With people and relationships it is completely different.
I do not blame others for this. I am simply writing to describe my experience and attempt an explanation. What I notice is an impatience and a fear. A fear of me. Sometimes I feel that I am a repulsion as though I had a disease that would infect others. I sense this. I feel it in the way they pretend not to see me. I feel it in their stare. Knowing and feeling these things makes me more up tight and more of a repulsion. I do not get the time to express myself. If I get frustrated and raise my voice I risk having the police arrest me for disturbing the peace or even physical violence from someone protecting someone from me.
Whatever it is about me that people sense and shrink from is as obvious as white lint on black velvet. I do not blend in. I avoid people. More often than not I am misunderstood. More often than not I do not understand. It is easier to avoid contact and this creates more problems. My "catch 22" is I need people to help me, but going to them often gets me hurt.
Fear
About age six or seven I was with my family visiting a mill in Arkansas. On this particular river there was a waterfall just past the mill. I was with my brother and sister and a cousin or two. I remember being very close to the river and seeing the current moving rapidly. The noise of the water was deafening and to be heard, you had to shout. Even then, if someone was only a few feet away they would not hear you. I was following the others and having a hard time keeping up. They were quicker than me and the terrain was rough. There were lots of jagged rocks and obstacles. The trail narrowed and followed a rocky cliff that jutted straight up and towered overhead. Trees and vegetation were all around us. The trail, as I remember, narrowed and slanted slightly toward the river and the churning, white, swirling water. The rock face of the cliff on my right offered no holds for security. I was a few steps down the trail when i froze. To go on was too scary and I was too scared to turn around and go back. I knew I would slip and fall into the boiling, foaming water. I yelled for the others, but they were beyond the range of my voice. I just stood there crying.
The other children must have noticed I was not with them and my cousin came back for me. His voice was so comforting, "take my hand, I'll lead you across, it will be alright." I did, he did, and it was. Just like that my fear was gone.
I relate this story to explain the kind of fear and the intensity I have experienced throughout my life. It is not difficult for you to understand how a child could fear drowning in a raging river and even relate to the feeling with a similar experience of your own. It is more difficult for you to know that this is precisely the intensity of fear I may be feeling in a room that seems calm to you. You are not aware of any fear producing stimulus. That is because it comes from within myself. Know that the kind of fear that freezes a little boy can do the same to a man, because I am as helpless sometimes as the boy. I am paralyzed with fear. I am unable to keep up with the others and I am waiting and hoping for someone to take my hand and lead me to safety.
(More tomorrow as Lamron describes what it is like "hearing voices.")
Until the next time
John Strain